Adjusting the "width" and "height" element of this applet tag to specify the size
(in pixels) of the desired graph display.

Step
2 - Set up the Configuration data.
The 2D/3D Line Graph applet provides the following three
options for inputting the configuration data.

a)
Configuration File.
The applet will read all the configuration parameters
from a specified file. To use this option add
the following PARAM tag to your html code between
the <applet> and </applet> tags,

<PARAM
name="chartproperties" value="lineprops.txt">

where
"lineprops.txt" is the name of the
file containing the configuration data ( click
here for an example file ). As you will
see from the example file each property is specified
on a name, value basis.

Adjust
the property values to specify the characteristics
of the line graph and then place this file in
the same directory as your web page.

b)
HTML PARAM tags.Using this option the applet will read all
the configuration information from the standard
applet <PARAM> tags. Simply add the <PARAM>
tags, contained in the paramtags.txt file (click
here), to your html between the <APPLET>
and </APPLET> tag, adjusting the values
to specify the characteristics of the line graph.

c)
Server Side processThis option allows the line graph applet
to obtain all the configuration data from a
server side application. The server side script
should be designed to output the configuration
data in the same format as the file in option
a) above.

The
following PARAM tag should be added to your
html between the <APPLET> and </APPLET>
tags.

<PARAM
name="chartproperties" value="[URL
of Server Process]">

inserting
the URL of your server side application in the
value element of this tag.
For an example script see LineConfigServlet.java
in the ServerTemplateScripts directory.

For most implementations supplying the configuration data either from
a data file or HTML parameters will be the most efficient, however supplying this data via a server side script is useful
where you wish to hold this data in a database. A server side script would then be used to read the configuration data from
the database and then supply to the applet at runtime.

Step
3 - Set up the Line Graph data
As with the configuration data there are three
options for supplying the data to the applet,

a)
Data File.
The applet will read all the data from a specified
file. To use this option add the following PARAM
tag to your html code between the <applet>
and </applet> tags,

<PARAM
name="chartdata" value="linedata.txt">

where
"linedata.txt" is the name of the
file containing the data ( click
here for an example file ). As you will
see from the example file each piece of data
is specified on a name, value basis. The first
element of each line represents the data name
(specifying the series and data order) and then
the value.

Simply create a similar file, adding your data
in the values. For a full explanation of this
file please see the "Retrieving Data from
Files" under the "Data and Configuration"
section ( or click here).

b)
Server Side processThis option is the most powerful and gives
the applet the ability to retrieve data from
databases without compromising database security.
This method involves specifying a server side
script in the html page which in turn returns
the data to the graph applet, giving enormous
flexibility for data acquisition.

The
server side script can be constructed in the
language of your choice and as such can be written
to acquire data from the widest variety of sources,
multiple databases etc.

To
instruct the applet to retrieve data from a
server side script simply insert the following
<PARAM> tag between the <APPLET>
and </APPLET> tags in your html page.

<PARAM
name="chartdata" value="[URL
of Server Process]"

inserting
the URL of your server side application in the
value element of this tag. The
server side script should be designed to output
the data in the same format as the file in option
a) above

For
a full description of constructing a server
side script which retrieves data from a database
see the section "Connecting the Graph to
a database" under the "Data and Configuration"
section ( or click here).

c)
HTML PARAM tags.Using this option the applet will read all
the graph data from the standard applet <PARAM>
tags. Simply add the <PARAM> tags, contained
in the dataparamtags.txt file (click
here), to your html between the <APPLET>
and </APPLET> tag, adjusting the values
to specify the data for the line graph.

This option is the simplest method of supplying data to the graph applet and is probably most useful
where the graph data is either static or the html page is constructed dynamically, (e.g.. Via ASP , PHP or JSP.)

Step 4 - Upload the jar file to your web server.
The final step is to simply to place theLinegraph.jar
file in the same directory as your web page. At only 20kb this jar file contains all the applet code for producing the graph
in your page and as such is very fast to load and run.

If you experience any difficulties implementing then please do not hesitate
to contact us at, JPowered Support